A chibouk (/tʃɪˈbʊk, -ˈbuːk/; French: chibouque; from the Turkish: çıbık, çubuk (English: "stick" from the Persian word choobak "چوبک" meaning small wooden stick) (Serbian: "Čibuk"); also romanized čopoq, ciunoux or tchibouque)[1][2][3] is a very long-stemmed Turkish tobacco pipe, often featuring a clay bowl ornamented with precious stones.
While primarily known as a Turkish pipe, the chibouk was once popular across the Ottoman Empire and in Iran as well.
Like Chinese opium pipes, chibouk are antiquated smoking devices, and are rarely, if at all produced in modern times.
Their use in Turkey and the Middle East may have died out with the growing popularity of the hookah and cigarettes.
Enver Pasha was known to have smoked chibouk,[6] as was Jirjis al-Jawhari (Moallem Guerguis Koft), a Coptic Egyptian leader appointed the General Steward of all Egypt by Napoleon in 1798.